Tab Article
Czeslaw Milosz:
Herling was one of the most important witnesses of the twentieth century, a heroic man and truly worthy writer.
Book Description:
Short stories by Poland's greatest writer, and survivor of WWII Soviet labor prison camps.
The Noonday Cemetery & Other Stories, selected by Herling himself shortly before his death in 2000, are the 15 most representative and accomplished stories of the last two decades of his life. Contained herein are: "The Noonday Cemetery," in which the widow of a WWII German officer and a cemetery custodian are both shot to death unexplainably; "Beata Santa," about a Polish woman raped by Serbs and pressured to keep her child; "A Hot Breath of the Desert," describing the lives of an archeologist couple, who settle down in the idyllic region of Lucania, until the wife (who's witnessed WWII's horrors), mysteriously loses her memory; and "A Madrigal of Mourning," in which a woman musicologist falls in love with Carlo Gesualdo (1560-1613), Prince of Venosa, a madrigalist and murderer.
Gustaw Herling's memoir A World Apart is among the most powerful accounts of life in the Soviet gulag. And since Herling's collection of interlinked novellas, The Island, was published to great acclaim in 1993, the number of American readers of this writer "of extraordinary talent and scope" (Louis Begley, The New York Times Book Review) has grown. The Boston Globe has said that Herling is "a writer of stylistic mastery and moral depth, who deserves to be placed among the best in any language."
About the Author:
Gustaw Herling-Grudzinski was born in 1919 in Kielce, Poland. In 1940, he was captured by the Russians and spent two years in a Soviet labor camp. After WWII, he founded the Polish magazine Kultura, which virtually sustained Polish culture during Communist rule. He settled finally in Naples, where he died in 2000.